1. politicised - Adjective
2. politicised - Verb
politicised (comparative more politicised, superlative most politicised)
(British spelling) alternative form of politicized
politicised
simple past and past participle of politicise
At its birth eugenics was not a politicised science; it was a science-ised political creed. Matt Ridley
The President's post should not be politicised. Once a president is elected, he is above politics. Abdul Kalam
I don't envy or much respect people who are completely politicised. Christopher Hitchens
The number of people my age, younger now, a whole generation younger, who are fiercely bright, over-educated, under-employed and who are politicised and purposeless really upsets me. It's soul-destroying. Benedict Cumberbatch
It has always seemed slightly uncomfortable, the idea of politicised musicians. Very few of them are clever enough to do it; if they're good at the political side, the music side suffers, and vice versa. Robert Smith (musician)
ACOSS put out a policy document this month clarifying its position and warning a wide-ranging report from Treasury's Retirement Income Review, which has not yet been made public, has already become "politicised". Source: Internet